scholarly journals Determining Allele-Specific Protein Expression (ASPE) Using a QconCAT-Based Proteomics Method: a Novel Approach to Identify Cis-acting Genetic Variants

2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jian Shi ◽  
Xinwen Wang ◽  
Huaijun Zhu ◽  
Hui Jiang ◽  
Danxin Wang ◽  
...  

AbstractMeasuring allele-specific expression (ASE) is a powerful approach for identifying cis-regulatory genetic variants. Here we developed a novel targeted proteomics method for quantification of allele-specific protein expression (ASPE) based on scheduled high resolution multiple reaction monitoring (sMRM-HR) with a heavy stable isotope-labeled quantitative concatamer (QconCAT) internal protein standard. This strategy was applied to the determination of the ASPE of UGT2B15 in human livers using the common UGT2B15 nonsynonymous variant rs1902023 (i.e. Y85D) as the marker to differentiate expressions from the two alleles. The QconCAT standard contains both the wild type tryptic peptide and the Y85D mutant peptide at a ratio of 1:1 to ensure accurate measurement of the ASPE of UGT2B15. The results from 18 UGT2B15 Y85D heterozygotes revealed that the ratios between wild type Y allele and mutant D allele varied from 0.60 to 1.46, indicating the presence of cis-regulatory variants. In addition, we observed no significant correlations between the ASPE and mRNA ASE of UGT2B15, suggesting the involvement of different cis-acting variants in regulating the transcription and translation processes of the gene. This novel ASPE approach provides a powerful tool for capturing cis-genetic variants involved in post-transcription processes, an important yet understudied area of research.

Blood ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 130 (Suppl_1) ◽  
pp. 926-926
Author(s):  
Xu Zhang ◽  
Jihyun Song ◽  
Binal N. Shah ◽  
Galina Miasnikova ◽  
Adelina Sergueeva ◽  
...  

Abstract Homozygosity for the VHLR200W mutation in Chuvash polycythemia (CP) leads to decreased degradation of the α subunits of hypoxia inducible factor (HIF)-1 and HIF-2 by the hypomorphic variant of VHL, the principal negative regulator of HIFs. The constitutively activated HIFs directly regulate the transcription of a suite of hypoxic responsible genes, including the principal regulators of erythropoiesis, vessel development, and glycolytic metabolism, which further trigger a downstream cascade of gene expression. Besides these transcriptional factors, cis acting elements play an important role in the hypoxic gene regulatory network. To assess the extent of cis regulatory variation in hypoxic gene expression, we compared allele-specific expression (ASE) in purified reticulocytes between VHLR200W homozygote individuals and age- and gender-matched wild type control individuals living at the same altitude of ~200 meters from the Chuvash population. Cell fractions of reticulocytes were purified from 17 VHLR200W homozygotes and 13 wild type individuals. Total RNA was extracted, depleted of ribosomal RNA and hemoglobin transcripts, and reverse transcribed. Strand-specific libraries were constructed for 125 bp paired-end sequencing to 30-45 million read pairs per sample using Illumina HiSeq 2500 platform. The samples were collected and processed in three batches across two years, with VHL genotype randomized in each batch. The sequencing data were mapped to human reference genome and analyzed for differential expression and differential ASE between VHLR200W homozygotes and wild type individuals. At 5% false discovery rate (FDR, i.e., <5 false positives in 100 detected genes), 1,267 genes were differentially expressed with more than 1.2-fold change in CP patients, 703 elevated and 564 decreased. Genes up-regulated in CP were enriched (fold enrichment >5, FDR <0.05) in REACTOME pathways of epigenetic remodeling (Packaging of telomere ends, DNA methylation, HDACs deacetylate histones, PRC2 methylates histones and DNA, Deposition of new CENPA-containing nucleosomes at the centromere, HATs acetylate histones) and oxidative stress induced senescence (DNA damage/telomere stress induced senescence, Senescence-associated secretory phenotype, Oxidative stress induced senescence). Genes decreased in CP were enriched in REACTOME pathways of cell cycle (E2F-enabled inhibition of pre-replication complex formation, Nuclear pore complex disassembly, SUMOylation of DNA replication proteins) and DNA damage repair (Activation of ATR in response to replication stress, SUMOylation of DNA damage response and repair proteins). ASE was analyzed between CP and wild type individuals to assess hypoxic response-dependent genetic effects on gene expression. For the 1,267 genes differentially expressed in the CP, we selected genes containing exonic SNPs with heterozygous alleles for ASE analysis. With a null hypothesis of no cis acting regulation on the gene expression, both alleles are expected to be expressed at the same level, whereas allelic imbalance indicates linked cis regulation. At a given bi-allelic SNP, individuals with ≥2 read counts covering each of the reference and alternative alleles and with ≥20 total counts were included in the analysis. Exonic SNPs with at least one individual in each of the CP and wild type group were further selected to test for differential ASE between the CP and wild type groups, using a generalized linear model. A total of 147 genes passed the filtering and were analyzed, among which 32 were detected to have significant CP-dependent ASE at 5% FDR. Some of these genes may have important roles in hypoxic responses in CP reticulocytes, for example NEIL3, encoding a DNA glycosylase that initiates the first step in base excision repair by cleaving bases damaged by reactive oxygen species, and STOM, encoding an integral membrane protein that localizes to the cell membrane of red blood cells, loss of which is associated with hereditary stomatocytosis. Our study reveals plethora of gene expression changes in CP reticulocytes compared to wild type controls, among which 22% could be regulated by hypoxic response-specific cis genetic variations. These observations indicate the prominence of cis elements in hypoxic response, for which substantial inter-individual differences exist even among a relatively isolated population. Disclosures Gordeuk: Emmaus Life Sciences: Consultancy.


PLoS ONE ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 3 (12) ◽  
pp. e4105 ◽  
Author(s):  
Susana Campino ◽  
Julian Forton ◽  
Srilakshmi Raj ◽  
Bert Mohr ◽  
Sarah Auburn ◽  
...  

2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Emad Bahrami-Samani ◽  
Yi Xing

AbstractGene expression is tightly regulated at the post-transcriptional level through splicing, transport, translation, and decay. RNA-binding proteins (RBPs) play key roles in post-transcriptional gene regulation, and genetic variants that alter RBP-RNA interactions can affect gene products and functions. We developed a computational method ASPRIN (Allele-Specific Protein-RNA Interaction), that uses a joint analysis of CLIP-seq (cross-linking and immunoprecipitation followed by high-throughput sequencing) and RNA-seq data to identify genetic variants that alter RBP-RNA interactions by directly observing the allelic preference of RBP from CLIP-seq experiments as compared to RNA-seq. We used ASPRIN to systematically analyze CLIP-seq and RNA-seq data for 166 RBPs in two ENCODE (Encyclopedia of DNA Elements) cell lines. ASPRIN identified genetic variants that alter RBP-RNA interactions by modifying RBP binding motifs within RNA. Moreover, through an integrative ASPRIN analysis with population-scale RNA-seq data, we showed that ASPRIN can help reveal potential causal variants that affect alternative splicing via allele-specific protein-RNA interactions.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Richard J White ◽  
Eirinn Mackay ◽  
Stephen W Wilson ◽  
Elisabeth M Busch-Nentwich

In model organisms, RNA sequencing is frequently used to assess the effect of genetic mutations on cellular and developmental processes. Typically, animals heterozygous for a mutation are crossed to produce offspring with different genotypes. Resultant embryos are grouped by genotype to compare homozygous mutant embryos to heterozygous and wild-type siblings. Genes that are differentially expressed between the groups are assumed to reveal insights into the pathways affected by the mutation. Here we show that in zebrafish, differentially expressed genes are often overrepresented on the same chromosome as the mutation due to different levels of expression of alleles from different genetic backgrounds. Using an incross of haplotype-resolved wild-type fish, we found evidence of widespread allele-specific expression, which appears as differential expression when comparing embryos homozygous for a region of the genome to their siblings. When analysing mutant transcriptomes, this means that differentially expressed genes on the same chromosome as a mutation of interest may not be caused by that mutation. Typically, the genomic location of a differentially expressed gene is not considered when interpreting its importance with respect to the phenotype. This could lead to pathways being erroneously implicated or overlooked due to the noise of spurious differentially expressed genes on the same chromosome as the mutation. These observations have implications for the interpretation of RNA-seq experiments involving outbred animals and non-inbred model organisms.


Author(s):  
Siobhan Cleary ◽  
Cathal Seoighe

Diploidy has profound implications for population genetics and susceptibility to genetic diseases. Although two copies are present for most genes in the human genome, they are not necessarily both active or active at the same level in a given individual. Genomic imprinting, resulting in exclusive or biased expression in favor of the allele of paternal or maternal origin, is now believed to affect hundreds of human genes. A far greater number of genes display unequal expression of gene copies due to cis-acting genetic variants that perturb gene expression. The availability of data generated by RNA sequencing applied to large numbers of individuals and tissue types has generated unprecedented opportunities to assess the contribution of genetic variation to allelic imbalance in gene expression. Here we review the insights gained through the analysis of these data about the extent of the genetic contribution to allelic expression imbalance, the tools and statistical models for gene expression imbalance, and what the results obtained reveal about the contribution of genetic variants that alter gene expression to complex human diseases and phenotypes. Expected final online publication date for the Annual Review of Biomedical Data Science, Volume 4 is July 2021. Please see http://www.annualreviews.org/page/journal/pubdates for revised estimates.


Epigenomics ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 10 (10) ◽  
pp. 1315-1326 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ramya Potabattula ◽  
Marcus Dittrich ◽  
Julia Böck ◽  
Larissa Haertle ◽  
Tobias Müller ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Emily Berger ◽  
Deniz Yorukoglu ◽  
Lillian Zhang ◽  
Sarah K. Nyquist ◽  
Alex K. Shalek ◽  
...  

Abstract Haplotype reconstruction of distant genetic variants remains an unsolved problem due to the short-read length of common sequencing data. Here, we introduce HapTree-X, a probabilistic framework that utilizes latent long-range information to reconstruct unspecified haplotypes in diploid and polyploid organisms. It introduces the observation that differential allele-specific expression can link genetic variants from the same physical chromosome, thus even enabling using reads that cover only individual variants. We demonstrate HapTree-X’s feasibility on in-house sequenced Genome in a Bottle RNA-seq and various whole exome, genome, and 10X Genomics datasets. HapTree-X produces more complete phases (up to 25%), even in clinically important genes, and phases more variants than other methods while maintaining similar or higher accuracy and being up to 10×  faster than other tools. The advantage of HapTree-X’s ability to use multiple lines of evidence, as well as to phase polyploid genomes in a single integrative framework, substantially grows as the amount of diverse data increases.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Romuald Laso-Jadart ◽  
Kevin Sugier ◽  
Emmanuelle Petit ◽  
Karine Labadie ◽  
Pierre Peterlongo ◽  
...  

AbstractAllele-specific expression (ASE) is a widely studied molecular mechanism at cell, tissue and organism levels. Here, we extrapolated the concept of ASE to the population-scale (psASE), aggregating ASEs detected at smaller scales. We developed a novel approach to detect psASE based on metagenomic and metatranscriptomic data of environmental samples containing communities of organisms. This approach which measures the deviation between the frequency and the relative expression of biallelic loci, was applied on samples collected during the Tara Oceans expedition (2009-2013), in combination to new Oithona similis transcriptomes, a widespread marine copepod. Among a total of 25,768 single nucleotide variants (SNVs) of O. similis, 587 (2.3%) were targeted by psASE in at least one population. The distribution of SNVs targeted by psASE in different populations is significantly shaped by population genomic differentiation (p-value = 9.3×10−9), supporting a partial genetic control of psASE. To investigate the link between evolution and psASE, loci under selection were compared to loci under psASE. A significant amount of SNVs (0.6%) were targeted by both selection and psASE (p-values < 9.89×10−3), supporting the hypothesis that natural selection and ASE may lead to the same phenotype. Population-scale ASE offers new insights into the gene regulation control in populations and its link with natural selection.


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